• Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. · May 1993

    Comparative Study

    Marrow toxicity of fractionated vs. single dose total body irradiation is identical in a canine model.

    • R Storb, R F Raff, T Graham, F R Appelbaum, H J Deeg, F G Schuening, H Shulman, and M Pepe.
    • Division of Clinical Research, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle.
    • Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 1993 May 20; 26 (2): 275-83.

    PurposeWe explored in dogs the marrow toxicity of single dose total body irradiation delivered from two opposing 60Co sources at a rate of 10 cGy/min and compared results to those seen with total body irradiation administered in 100 cGy fractions with minimum interfraction intervals of 6 hr. Dogs were not given marrow transplants.ResultsWe found that 200 cGy single dose total body irradiation was sublethal, with 12 of 13 dogs showing hematopoietic recovery and survival. Seven of 21 dogs given 300 cGy single dose total body irradiation survived compared to 6 of 10 dogs given 300 cGy fractionated total body irradiation (p = .18). One of 28 dogs given 400 cGy single dose total body irradiation survived compared to none of six given fractionated radiation (p > .20). With granulocyte colony stimulating factor administered from day 0-21 after 400 cGy total body irradiation, most dogs survived with hematological recovery. Because of the almost uniform success with granulocyte colony stimulating factor after 400 cGy single dose total body irradiation, a study of granulocyte colony stimulating factor after 400 cGy fractionated total body irradiation was deemed not to be informative and, thus, not carried out. Additional comparisons between single dose and fractionated total body irradiation were carried out with granulocyte colony stimulating factor administered after 500 and 600 cGy of total body irradiation. As with lower doses of total body irradiation, no significant survival differences were seen between the two modes of total body irradiation, and only 3 of 26 dogs studied survived with complete hematological recovery. Overall, therefore, survival among dogs given single dose total body irradiation was not different from that of dogs given fractionated total body irradiation (p = .67). Similarly, the slopes of the postirradiation declines of granulocyte and platelet counts and the rates of their recovery in surviving dogs given equal total doses of single versus fractionated total body irradiation were indistinguishable.ConclusionWithin the limitations of the experimental design, we conclude that single-dose and fractionated total body irradiation have comparable marrow toxicity in dogs.

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